The Seeing Stone (Arthur Trilogy 1 Adult Edition)
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The Seeing Stone (Arthur Trilogy 1 Adult Edition)

The Seeing Stone (Arthur Trilogy 1 Adult Edition)
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The Seeing Stone (Arthur Trilogy 1 Adult Edition)

Product Group: Book
Publisher: Phoenix (2006-09-20)
ISBN: 0753821214
EAN: 9780753821213
Paperback: 352 pages


Editorial Reviews


Amazon.co.uk Review
Young Arthur de Caldicott is anxious to grow up, spread his wings and become a knight. But for now he must content himself with the life he has in the bosom off his family and friends. One day one of these friends, the old and mysterious Merlin, gives Arthur a special stone, and from that moment his life becomes entwined with that of King Arthur himself...

Arthur:The Seeing Stone is an extraordinary novel, contemporary in feel but with its roots deep in the past. One hundred short chapters give snapshots of both the mythical world of King Arthur and the day-to-day existence of a young boy growing up in 1199, and as the two begin to touch on each other's lives the story develops into a multi-layered novel with a depth and intensity that maintains a page-turning, easy-to-read--yet at the same time challenging--quality that is somehow unique.

Arthur: The Seeing Stone is an absolute must-read, written with a rich and earthy gusto that, combined with Kevin Crossley-Holland's authorative attention to the details of the Middle Ages, quite simply takes the breath away. (Age 9 and over) --Susan Harrison


Customer Reviews


Suitable for all
Rating (5)
Date: 2008-03-27

1 out of 1 customers found this reveiw helpful


In `Arthur-The Seeing Stone', Arthur is the thirteen-year-old son of a knight. The book begins with news that King Richard the Lionheart (Richard I) is dying. It is told by Arthur and reveals his ambition to become a squire and his fears of his brother, Serle. Just before John becomes king, Arthur's guide, Merlin, gives Arthur a seeing stone. In this stone he sees his other self becoming King of Britain. He also discovers that their lives are remarkably similar. This book tells of the typical life of a knight's son in 1199.
As well as being an absorbing and interesting story, `Arthur-The Seeing Stone' teaches simple history and inspires people to learn more about the period of time. It is the first in a trilogy. This book takes the interesting parts of the legend of King Arthur and combines them with the day-to-day life of a page. I would definitely recommend this book because it is very interesting.


Arthurian Legend seen from the eyes of a 13-year-old boy
Rating (4)
Date: 2007-02-13

5 out of 5 customers found this reveiw helpful


Young Arthur, at the age of 13, in the year 1199, is given a beautiful obsidian stone by a man named Merlin. The boy Arthur lives a normal, if priveleged, existence as a page to his father on a wealthy manor in the Marches, just on the "England" side of the border with Wales. He lives together with his parents, his elder brother and younger sister, and he dreams of nothing other than one day becoming a Squire.

The stone seems perfectly normal at first, and then one day Arthur starts to see images in the stone and a story starts to emerge... a story featuring another young boy named Arthur!

The plot is really good, and with the awards that the book received, including winning the "Guardian Children's Fiction" prize, I was expecting it to be that good. However, I was quite disappointed to find that the text of this average-length book had been chopped up into a staggering 100 chapters, some just the length of a short paragraph!! I felt as though I literally "struggled" through to Chapter 33 as the text, for me, was lacking immediacy and flow!

I persevered, and my annoyance at the constant disruptions of thought faded as I was drawn into the lives or Arthur, his family, and their retainers, skilfully woven with the threads of Arthurian Legend. The book is built on solid foundations of well-researched historical evidence regarding the lives and customs of Britons at the turn of the thirteenth century. I now look forward to experiencing the rest of the Arthurian Legend through the eyes of young Arthur, in books two and three ("At the Crossing Places", and "King of the Middle March"). I only hope that the chapters become more substantial and terrible chapter headings such as "Mouthfuls of Air" (Lynne Truss would have a field day with this one!!) are avoided!

A good story - worth reading if you can persevere with the numerous chapters!


Absolutely brilliant!
Rating (5)
Date: 2006-08-17

4 out of 4 customers found this reveiw helpful


This is one of the best books I have ever read. Due to the author's fantastic descriptions and vivid depictions of medieval manor life, you feel as if you have been temporarily absorbed into Arthur's world. It's a fascinating and very entertaining read.

Fortunately, the sequel is just as good but I did not like the third book as much (probably because I loved the whole medieval manor thing in the other two books, and because it features too many technical details about ships) but it's still worth a read.


The King Who Was and Will be
Rating (5)
Date: 2002-10-12

2 out of 2 customers found this reveiw helpful


A literary masterpiece, a book of historical fact and a retelling of the classic Arthur stories all rolled into one fantastic novel. It's a children's book like never before. It follows the story of thirteen-year-old Arthur de Caldicot who wants to become a knight more than anything else in the world. However, when his elderly frieng Merlin gives him a shining black seeing stone. Arthur's whole world changes. Not only does this book tell a fictional story, it also contains interesting historical detail about the period of time. This book contains the best description I have ever come across in a children's novel and is the first book in an astounding trilogy. Brilliant.


The best book I read last year (and I read plenty)
Rating (5)
Date: 2002-09-24

12 out of 13 customers found this reveiw helpful


Though as luminously vivid as a stained-glass painting or medieval tapestry, 'Arthur: The Seeing Stone' conjures up much more than a frozen window on time. It is alive and in constant motion: so much so that you can almost smell, touch and taste its tumultuous world. In an England poised for a new century but riven with religious conflict, political upheaval and feudal tension, Arthur begins a personal quest to find his true identity and the real applications of duty, justice and truth. In the course of Arthur's adventures and discovery of the mysterious Seeing Stone, Kevin Crossley-Holland reveals a rare talent for giving philosophical value to the everyday, and for playing seamlessly with the crucial link between past, present and future. Before reading 'Arthur' I had reservations about how relevant such a seemingly traditional book could be to today's readers, but I didn't bargain either for its wonderful sense of curiosity or for the sheer quality of its writing, which is elegant, witty, suggestive and attentive to detail. Nor can I recollect a scene in any book where questions about existence and meaning are cast as delicately as in the image of Arthur's mother burying her son Luke beside the tiny graves of his brothers Mark and Matthew, both dead in infancy before him. As modern in its appeal as it is genuinely historical in outlook, and always rich and astonishing, this book is proof of a master at work.

Retail Price: £6.99
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